Humidity may be the key to super-lubricity 'switch' that controls friction

January 9, 2023

By Jamie Oberdick

This article originally appeared on Penn State News. Seong Kim, distinguished professor of chemical engineering and associate head of the Department of Chemical Engineering, was featured.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Sometimes friction is good, such as the friction between the road and a car’s tires to prevent the vehicle from skidding. But sometimes friction is bad. If you did not put oil in that very same car, there would be so much friction in the bearings of the engine that the car could not operate.

A material state known as super-lubricity, where friction between two contacting surfaces nearly vanishes, is a phenomenon that materials researchers have studied for years due to the potential for reducing a device’s energy cost and its wear and tear, which are two major drawbacks of friction. However, there are times when friction is needed within the same device, and the ability to turn super-lubricity on and off would be a boon for multiple practical engineering applications.

Seong Kim, distinguished professor of chemical engineering and associate head of the Department of Chemical Engineering at Penn State, and Zhe Chen, a researcher with the State Key Laboratory of Fluid Power and Mechatronic Systems and the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Zhejiang University in China, proposed in a study in Applied Materials Today that this super-lubricity switch may be found in humidity — specifically, water vapor and vapor in phenol, which is a family of organic compounds.

Super-lubricity is a key characteristic of certain two-dimensional materials, which consist of a single layer of atoms, especially graphene and molybdenum disulfide. Graphene is often used as a solid lubricant, in the form of a coating on various materials such as metals and plastics. With graphene, the atoms are oriented in a hexagonal manner, which forms a mountain-and-valley landscape, much like a supermarket egg crate.

“When you go to the store to buy the 36-egg crate, you have peaks and valleys, a highly corrugated structure,” Kim said. “If you stack two egg crates so the lattices are facing and matching, it is extremely hard to slide them apart as the peaks of one are in the valleys of the other. But if you rotate the one a bit so the peaks do not go into the valleys, they can slide very easily. This demonstrates the way in which graphene can have super-lubricity.”

Cutting friction down to near zero is a boon for lessening wear and tear on mechanical devices and for saving energy. But it can also be something undesirable.

“Because friction causes about 25% to 30% of the energy loss in trucks and automobiles and can wear down machine parts, eliminating it can be good,” Kim said. “However, if we remove the friction completely, we do not have any traction. Without traction, it is difficult to control the motion of a vehicle or other machine.”

This makes the ability to turn super-lubricity on and off important; however, it long has been considered something that is difficult, even impossible, to do. Recently, this super-lubricity became thought of as more possible, with ideas involving things like mechanical force and exposure to light as potential ways to turn it off and on. Kim and his team have found promising results by altering the environment, namely, making it more humid via water and phenol vapor.

They used a silicon oxide probe on a graphite basal plane to demonstrate how this might be possible. Silicon is commonly used in microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) that have tiny moving parts and are used in devices such as the accelerometers found in Apple Watches and cellphones to measure speed.

The researchers found that the nanoscale super-lubricity between the silica tip and the graphene surface can be tuned by adsorption of different molecules from the environment. They discovered that super-low friction can be increased 25 times by water vapor and 45 times by phenol vapor. When the water is adsorbed on a silica surface, it forms a nanostructure similar to the structure it has in its solid state, ice.

“When we increase the humidity, water is on the silicon dioxide surface,” Kim said. “We can rearrange the structure in a way that the ice lattice matches with the graphite lattice. The atomic corrugation matches each other, and the friction goes up. This study suggests that producing a way to control the material’s surface humidity would enable the silica to slide on top of the graphite surface in a more engineered way. Once we do that, then we can turn super-lubricity on and off.”

Among the next steps for this research is improving the process to enable practical applications for this technique. Kim notes that while a large-scale macro application of a super-lubricity switch may be quite a way off, MEMS applications in devices such as cellphones and Fitbits are possible on a shorter timescale.

“Because they are such small devices, the actuation force is so small that any friction can kill the device,” Kim said. “To prevent such failure problems, many MEMS devices have the chlorinated carbon coatings. But these are organic coatings that cannot sustain for a long time over the repeated cycles because they wear off.”

Using graphene as a coating would make it possible to control the friction on and off, providing precise motion control, according to Kim. This would enable engineers to revisit previously developed devices and technologies that could not be used because of friction problems.

Kim also noted that this research paper is a fundamental interpretive study, and he points out that the discovery made in this research speaks to the importance of fundamental science.

“We would not be able to make this kind of discovery if we just looked at our publications and didn’t do the basic work,” Kim said. “Some may think that breakthroughs come naturally, but there is a lot of effort that goes into them. We cannot forget about doing the fundamental science that leads to these research collaborations and discoveries.”

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation.

 

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“We cannot forget about doing the fundamental science that leads to these research collaborations and discoveries.” — Seong Kim